Molecular and Cellular Biology, August 2000, p. 5789-5796, Vol. 20, No. 16
Richardson Laboratory, Department of
Pathology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada
Received 14 March 2000/Returned for modification 2 May
2000/Accepted 22 May 2000
The oncogenic transcription factor E2a-Pbx1 is expressed in some
cases of acute lymphoblastic leukemia as a result of chromosomal translocation 1;19. The early observation that E2a-Pbx1 incorporates transcriptional activation domains from E2a and a DNA-binding homeodomain from Pbx1 inspired a model in which E2a-Pbx1 promotes leukemogenic transformation of lymphoid progenitor cells through transcriptional induction of target genes defined by the Pbx1 portion
of the molecule. However, the subsequent demonstration that the only
known DNA-binding module on the molecule, the Pbx1 homeodomain, is
dispensable for the induction of lymphoblastic lymphoma in transgenic
mice called into question the contribution made by the Pbx1 portion. In
this study, we have used a domain swap approach coupled with a
fibroblast-based focus formation assay to evaluate further the
requirement for PBX1-encoded peptide elements in growth
deregulation by E2a-Pbx1. No impairment of focus formation was observed
when the entire Pbx1 portion was replaced with DNA-binding/dimerization
domains derived from yeast transcription factor GAL4 or GCN4.
Furthermore, replacement of Pbx1 with tandem FKBP domains that mediate
homodimerization in the presence of a synthetic ligand led to striking
growth deregulation exclusively in the presence of the dimerizing
agent. N-terminal elements encoded by E2A, including the
AD1 transcriptional activation domain, were required for
dimerization-induced focus formation. We conclude that transcriptional
target genes defined by heterologous C-terminal DNA-binding modules are
not required in growth deregulation by E2a fusion proteins. We
speculate that interactions between N-terminal E2a elements and
undefined proteins that could function as components of a
transcriptional coactivator complex may be more important.
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Role for Homodimerization in Growth
Deregulation by E2a Fusion Proteins
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Richardson
Laboratory, Department of Pathology, Queen's University, Kingston,
Ontario K7L 3N6, Canada. Phone: (613) 533-2345. Fax: (613) 533-2907. E-mail: LEBRUN{at}CLIFF.PATH.QUEENSU.CA.
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